T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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1154.1 | VAXmate | CURIE::THACKERAY | Ray Thackeray MR03 DTN 297-5622 | Sun Jan 17 1988 15:14 | 7 |
| Oh yes, one other thing. I do have access to a VAXmate. I could
use it as the computer, but I would still be interested to hear
the relative merits in the way of software, etc....
Tally-ho,
Ray.
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1154.2 | Mac and Roland S50 | LEDS::ORIN | Ensoniq, is EPS a Mirage? | Mon Jan 18 1988 08:50 | 25 |
| Ray -
I have the SuperMac with new cpu board and 1 meg memory. I use the Mark of the
Unicorn Performer and Composer software. See previous notes about Performer.
The MIDI interface is an OPCODE Systems Studio Plus. I purchased the software
and MIDI interface thru E.U. Wurlitzer in Boston. The MAC and a 20 mb hard disk
thru Acton Computer. There may also be a similar package for the ATARI ST for
less money. Total costs:
MAC update: $995.00 original purchase price $1700.00
MIDI: $250.00
Performer: $395.00
Composer: $495.00
Total: $2135.00
You will have to get a current price on the MAC. You need at least 512k memory.
For the sampling keyboard, I suggest you look at the Roland S50, and the Ensoniq
keyboards. The new Ensoniq EPS will be coming at the end of the month. The
Roland is about $2700 and the EPS $1995. There are some less expensive models
such as Korg and Casio. I haven't tried these.
Good luck, and happy music goody shopping
Dave
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1154.3 | Somebody put words in my mouth | BOLT::BAILEY | Steph Bailey | Mon Jan 18 1988 10:58 | 7 |
| Funny, I was going to recommend the same thing. (ST + S50).
I think that for music-only applications, the choice of MAC vs ST
is basically a wash. The ST is considerably cheaper, and the Mac is
more generally accepted.
Steph
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1154.4 | Give this a shot | DYO780::SCHAFER | OHIO:a river with builtin bath oil | Mon Jan 18 1988 11:36 | 35 |
| RE:.0
I just went thru this. The best h/w for the $$ is the ST. Suggest you
get a 1040; also a b/w monitor (for hi-rez graphics). Should be able
to get a used ST w/ monitor for around $700.
Best sequencing s/w I've seen for the ST is MasterTracks Pro from
Passport. List price is $350, which xlates to $260 @ 25% off. (Can)
Also use(s) MIDI files for patch dumps.
There are several scoring packages out for the ST. Have never seen or
tried any. Check out EZScore (Hybrid Arts), Copyist (Dr. T's), and
SuperScore (Sonus). There are probably more/better than this. Make
sure that the thing can read MIDI files. Assume you'll pay at least
$500 for a good scoring package. If you want the hassle, you COULD use
the VAXmate to run PC scoring packages, but I wouldn't recommend it.
What are we up to now? $1460? Let's make it $1500. (Still cheaper
than a MAC).
You'll (probably) need a MIDI merge/thru box for your setup (assume 2
ins, 3 or 4 outs). Tack on another $200 (over-estimate).
Sampler? Sheesh. You want rack mount or a board? This is wide open.
Expect to spend a bit over $2000 (eg, Akai S900=$2100, Yword
TX16W=$2300, EPS=$2000). We'll assume $2300 8-).
NOTE! DIGIDESIGN IS CURRENTLY CONVERTING SOUND DESIGNER TO RUN ON THE
ATARI ST! Due out "this spring" (aka, August). Vaporware, I know, but
good vaporware. List $495 ($370 @ 25% off).
Now, we're up to $4000 w/o the Digidesign software. How's that?
brad who's_been_thru_this_before
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1154.5 | | MENTOR::REG | It was 20 years ago next May | Mon Jan 18 1988 12:22 | 9 |
| re .4 Know anywhere I could get a "packaged deal" on the
Computer, sequencer and scoring software ?
This is a general question, I havn't get settled on the Atari,
though I'm close, I'd also like to know who does packaged deals
on Macs.
Reg
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1154.6 | Not me. | DYO780::SCHAFER | if (bucks .GT. 0) call MUSIC_STORE | Mon Jan 18 1988 12:35 | 15 |
| RE: .5 (package deal on ST/MAC)
Sorry, Reg. I don't know of anywhere, although you might give
Thorobred a call (Tampa, FL ... 813-237-5597). I think they sell the
h/w as well as the s/w.
FWIW, I would NOT get the ST new. Keep an eye on the local want ads
(called Trading Post in n/w Ohio). I got my 1040 with a b/w monitor
used for $645. Best new price I found was around $800. With the Mega
coming out and b/w owners trading up to color tubes for games, you can
get some pretty good deals.
Good luck.
brad
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1154.7 | | TALLIS::HERDEG | Mark Herdeg, LTN1-2/B17 226-6520 | Mon Jan 18 1988 13:43 | 14 |
|
You can also get some pretty good deals on used Macs these days. You
should be able to get a Mac Plus for around $1200. And beyond the music
software, there's tons of great commercial and free Mac software out
there.
There are a number of quality Mac mail order companies that ship overnight
and invariably beat all dealer prices. I'm positive that you would pay a
premium for any hardware/software package deal.
And, heh, if you opt for a Mac and a Mirage, I'm still selling Sound
Designer for $175...
-Mark
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1154.8 | Have you started yet ? | MENTOR::REG | Function->Function_al->Functional_ity->Functionality_able | Tue Feb 09 1988 13:38 | 8 |
| re .0 "In 12 weeks, I've committed a brithday present to myself."
Well; three down, nine to go. What progress in the decisions
domain ?
Reg {Home computer and sequencer software procrastinator
specialist}
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1154.9 | ST/KCS < 1K | SIGANA::JWILLIAMS | | Mon Mar 07 1988 16:30 | 41 |
| I have the ST setup running DR T's KCS (Keyboard Controlled Sequencer).
I run this on a CZ230S, which certainly isn't the pinnacle of synthesis
valhalla, I'm sure, but I'm amazed at how quickly I can piece a song
together. KCS doesn't have the nifty graphics, but the reward for
this is that it is FAST. I have worked with some other sequencer
type stuff, and the graphics look cool to the newcomer, but bog
down the program once you know what you're doing. The lack of
sophisticated graphics means that KCS goes for around $200. Don't
be alarmed if at first it seems like information blowout, It only
takes about four hours to figure it out (and about the same four
hours of waiting for spiffy graphics to wear thin). I'm still looking
for a good drum machine. The CZ230S has about the crudest drum
sequencer I've seen. The standard ST running KCS has virtually
unlimited notes. Here is a brief rundown of the features:
No graphics.
Track mode - 60 tracks
Open mode - 60 sequences
Song mode - 10 songs
Copy track to sequence to song and vice-versa.
Secondary sequences - control sequences with sequences.
Quantize, transpose, shift on events and regions.
Live mode and Step mode recording/editing.
Cueing and punching.
In all, there hasn't been a single thing I haven't been able to
do within a few commands. I like to experiment, so the fact that
the program is fast is great for comparing arrangements.
There isn't a single bad thing I can say about the ST/KCS arrangement.
The ST has the MIDI ports builtin and has tons of memory.
KCS is fast and powerful. You can get this setup for under $1000.
Dr T's also carries a score program which I haven't tried since
I don't read music anywhos.
The only complaint I have about my system is that the drum sequencer
in the CZ is the pits. I hope to remedy that soon.
John.
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1154.10 | Copyist Pro-DTP, running on cloes | EZ2GET::STEWART | Balanced on the biggest wave | Mon Sep 09 1991 13:41 | 37 |
|
Early details now, more to follow...
I just got Dr. T's Copyist Pro-DTP, which is the combined version of
the previously separate Pro and DTP (desk top publishing) versions.
Initial impression - jeez, this thing is complicated! It's not as bad
as when I first sat down to learn Ventura, but this really is a whole
new technology. I've written stuff by hand before, and didn't realize
how much "work" I was actually doing.
The installation failed without warning a couple of times until I
realized that the file handling code wasn't bright enough to handle a
network drive. After I guessed that something like that was the
problem, I let it install on a local hard disk and then moved it out to
the file server (Novell). I noted this in the comments space on the
registration card. Probably wouldn't be a problem for most people, but
it indicates that somebody didn't really design the disk I/O section
right.
Without reading the manual, I started up the program, imported a
sequence I had been playing with, and printed it. The package comes
with the Adobe Sonata font and the printed score is real pretty
I'm working through the (boring) tutorials now, so I can find out what
this thing can really do. One capability I haven't tested yet is the
ability to convert a score back into a MIDI file. So theoretically,
you could write the score on-screen in traditional music notation,
export it to your sequencer, and audition the results...
You know what a package like this reminds me of? It's like when you
first get a PC and start writing programs, but you don't have a printer
to get a listing. You spend a lot of time staring at the screen. With
the copyist I can now just print whatever I'm working on, then go to
the piano and pencil in new stuff...
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1154.11 | Wow, someone else uses that too... | TALK::HARRIMAN | 'Politically Correct' is an oxymoron | Tue Sep 17 1991 14:05 | 13 |
|
re: .-1
I've been using Copyist for a couple of years. Yes, it is awfully
complicated.
You can get from score back to midi using Copyist. I did it once to
prove that it could be done. To me, it is the exact opposite in
terms of "productive use of one's time". Are you using the PC version?
Mine is on the Atari (Mega-4 now).
/pjh
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1154.12 | I'm learning | EZ2GET::STEWART | Balanced on the biggest wave | Tue Sep 17 1991 15:00 | 8 |
|
I'm learning how to be "more productive" with it. For now, I'm not
bothering with all the neat stuff that you'd want to do if you were
going to publish a score. It seems to be easy to just import a MIDI
file, make a few selections, and print out something good enough to
work from. It's a great crutch for people like me who have to "see"
what they're doing.
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